consumer welfare (the compensating variation or the consumer surplus) that arises
18
Journal of Economic Perspectives
when new goods are introduced and gain a place in the market. This gain in
consumer welfare is measured by the area under the Hicksian compensated de-
mand curve above the current price, and for the consumers purchasing the
product, this gain represents a decrease in the cost of living (Hausman, 1997).
To measure the welfare gain from the introduction of a new product, it is
necessary to collect in each period data on quantities purchased and to estimate the
demand curve for the new product and its “virtual price”—the price sufficiently
high to reduce the quantity demanded to zero. A priori, one might expect that only
new goods that provide radically improved capabilities would generate significant
consumer surpluses. But in a well-known paper, Hausman (1997) estimated a
demand curve for what would seem to be a modestly differentiated new variety of
Cheerios breakfast cereal—Apple Cinnamon Cheerios—and calculated that its
introduction generated substantial additions to consumer welfare. In his compan-
ion article in this issue, Hausman argues that the Bureau of Labor Statistics should
not only calculate and adjust the Consumer Price Index for the introduction of
completely new goods, but that current approaches for dealing with quality change,
including the use of hedonic techniques, should be replaced by estimates of the
corresponding compensating variations.
13
The panel recognized that research into the welfare effects associated with new
goods is important and should be pursued. But it emphasized the immense
practical difficulties in the way of providing estimates of demand curves and virtual
prices, especially if done across the large number and wide variety of products that
would be required if this methodology were to supplant current methods of
adjusting for quality change. In particular, estimating these welfare effects would
impose the difficult requirement that the supply and demand factors that interact
to generate prices and qualities be disentangled to identify the demand curve itself.
Which assumption is chosen for identification purposes, among several competing
possibilities, can often make a substantial difference in results. Thus, Hausman’s
(1997) estimate of the demand elasticity for Apple Cinnamon Cheerios has been
disputed on grounds that a key assumption used in identifying the demand curve
was open to serious question (Bresnahan, 1997).
14
Knowledge about the desirability of most new products diffuses gradually
throughout the economy, so that the demand curve is, for awhile, shifting right-
ward. Where fads or fashions play an important role, the demand curves for a new
variety may first rise and then recede; consumer surpluses appear and then fade. To
capture continuing changes in demand, the demand curve for new products and
13
In both his cell phone and cereal studies, Hausman (1997, 1999) suggests that to avoid the uncer-
tainties of extrapolating the “true” demand curve backward, outside the limits of observed data one
could calculate a conservative lower bound estimate by extending back a tangent to the demand curve
from the observed price and quantity.
14
As pointed out earlier, hedonic equations are designed to estimate the market prices of bundles of
characteristics. They do not depend on identifying the demand and supply factors underling price
changes and hence generally pose much less rigorous econometric requirements.
The Consumer Price Index: Conceptual Issues and Practical Suggestions
19
varieties must be continuously reestimated, and the forces affecting supply and
demand continuously disentangled.
There is an important potential in using scanner data, as well as other com-
mercial electronic databases, to collect real time price and quantity data that could
assist in studying new goods. At the same time, however there are substantial
practical and conceptual challenges that would have to be overcome to incorporate
widespread use of scanner data in the CPI.
15
The panel’s report discusses both the
possibilities and the challenges and identifies a number of areas that ought to
receive high priority for research and experimentation.
The National Academy of Sciences panel concluded that it is unlikely a
consensus methodology for producing reliable estimates of demand curves and
virtual prices will emerge in the near future. It is impossible for the Bureau of Labor
Statistics to attempt to incorporate into the Consumer Price Index measures of the
welfare gain from the introduction of new goods or new varieties of existing goods
with the economic and statistical techniques available at this time. Some panel
members believed that even if reliable estimating methodology were available, the
welfare gains from the introduction of new goods should not be treated as equiv-
alent to a price reduction in the CPI. But recognizing that there are no measures
of national output growth available that reflect the welfare gains from those events,
the panel agreed that research in this area, while not designed to replace the CPI,
should be directed toward developing, to the extent feasible, a separate experi-
mental index that did account for such gains.
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